Understanding Health Insurance and Its Benefits

 
HEALTH INSURANCE
 
 
INTRODUCTION
 
Everyone no matter how healthy needs medical care
at some point in time. This may be in form of
preventive care or treatment for sicknesses
and injuries.
With medical care comes payment of fees in one
form or the other.
Affordability of such fees at the point of use may be
difficult.
Health insurance provides a form of financing which
make payment for the fees relatively easier.
 
.
 
INTRODUCTION CONTD.
 
Health insurance is an institutional and financial that
helps households, individuals and organizations to set
aside financial resources to meet costs of medical care
in the event of illness.
The advantage of insurance is that it converts
unpredictable future expenses into payments that can
be budgeted for in advance.
From this you will observe that health insurance
scheme option in health care financing significantly
differs from user-fees which in some places are
described as ‘cash and carry’
 
 
Definition Of Health Insurance
 
Health insurance 
is a system in which prospective
consumers of care make payment to a third party
in the form of an insurance scheme, which in the
event of future illness will pay the provider of
care for some or all of the expenses incurred.
Health insurance is a type of insurance whereby
the insurer pays the medical costs of the insured
if the insured becomes sick due to covered
causes, or due to accidents.
 
Health Insurance Contd.
 
The insurer may be a private organization or a
government agency.
Health insurance is an agreement between a
person, who is called the policyholder, and an
insurance agent.
Insurance agents or carriers are organizations
that offer financial protection in case of illness
or injury and pays for the policyholder’s
medical treatment.
 
Health Insurance Contd.
 
The fundamental concept of health insurance is
that it balances costs across a large, random
sample of individuals.
For instance, an insurance company has a pool of
1000 randomly selected subscribers with each
paying N1000.00 per month. Fifty of them get
really sick that month while the others stay
healthy, which means the insurance company,
can use the money of the paid by the healthy
people to treat the sick persons
 
Types of Health Insurance
 
1. Private Health Insurance
Private health insurance is a contract between an
insurance company and the customer and in the
private sector. Private insurance can be for 
groups 
like
companies, labour unions, professional association or
for 
individuals
.
Private: 
This is through employer owned on-sight
health facilities or through contract with outside
providers, contribution payable is based strictly on the
needs of the individual i.e. the higher the health needs
of the contribution the higher the payment.
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
2 . Public Health Insurance
The public sector third party may be Parastatals,
insurance scheme, government, and social
security and sometimes the providers.
With the publicly funded health insurance the
good and the bad risks all receive coverage
without regard to health status, which eliminates
the problem of adverse selection and amplifies
the problem of moral hazard.
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
3. Social Insurance
Insurance program financed by government
through tax revenues that guarantee citizens
financial benefits for events which are beyond
individual control, such as old age, disability and
poor health.
Payment is irrespective of the needs and is
usually based on employment and income.
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
_ Based on the principle of solidarity
_ Contribution based on ability to pay
_ Resources are pooled together among a large
population
_ It enhances security of each individual in the
group.
Higher income earners will subsidize those with
lower income and those with lower health needs
will subsidize those with higher health needs
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
4.  Community Sponsored Insurance
A community based program which normally
operates in the rural areas and mostly
localized e.g. health care scheme in Thailand,
Tsonga in Kwara State, Nigeria
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
Other types of HIS include
5.  Direct
Here the Health Insurance Scheme builds or rents its own
health care premises exclusively for the use of the insured
persons.
 
6.  Indirect
Here the scheme makes contracts with selected providers
for the provision of defined services at negotiated prices,
the authority rather than the insured persons makes the
payment.
 
Types of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
7 Reimbursement
The patient buys his own medical care in the
private market and then sends the receipted
bills to the insured who reimburses the
insured person either for part of the full cost
or on the basis of standard payment for a
particular service which will normally be well
below the prices actually paid
 
Problems Of Health Insurance
 
This include:
 Increasing cost of health care
Some private insurance companies charge people at
different rates based on their own personal health
Some medical problems may not be covered by the
scheme
Health care recipient is not involved in negotiating the
cost of care. Some health care providers have popular
and unpopular ways of controlling these costs.
Some providers may have different rates for the same
procedure for those insured and those not insured
 
Problems Of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
Problems With Private Health Insurance
There two main problems and these are adverse selection and
moral hazard.
Adverse selection 
- Describes the tendency for only those who
will benefit from insurance to buy it or participate in it.
Adverse selection can leave an insurance company with primarily
sick subscribers and will have the problem of balancing out the
cost of medical expenses with a large number of healthy
subscribers.
This is because unhealthy people are more likely to purchase
health insurance because they anticipate heavy medical bills
whereas those who consider themselves to be healthy may
decide that medical insurance is an unnecessary expense
 
Problems Of Health Insurance CONTD.
 
If they see a doctor once in a year and it costs N500.00,
that much better than making monthly insurance of
N600.00.
 
Moral hazard 
– Describes the state of mind and change in
behaviour that results from the knowledge the health
insurance will take care of medical bills and people
therefore overuse medical care since they do not incur out-
of –pocket expenses. Where health insurance is in practice,
people who do not have insurance cover or are under-
insured may wait for too long out of fear of high medical
bills until the illness become life threatening.
 
Conclusion
 
Health insurance is an option of health financing that is
used in most developed countries and increasing number
of developing countries are also practising health insurance
scheme.
It converts unpredictable future expenses into payments
that can be budgeted for in advance.
There are various types of health insurance scheme. The
scheme now appear to be a sustainable way of financing
health care and reduces the problem of ‘cash and carry’
health financing and this to a large extent reduces the
emergency financial burden when household need to utilize
health care.
 
NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE
SCHEME (NHIS)
 
The history of health insurance scheme in Nigeria
is over 3 decades but not until 1997 that the
scheme was officially launched.
The implementation of the scheme in Nigeria is
planned to be in phases commencing with pubic
civil servants.
Private sector involvement is incorporated into
the scheme with the use of Health Maintenance
Organizations (HMOs) to collect contributions
from participants and also pay providers of services.
 
NHIS CONTD.
 
Historical Perspective
In Nigeria the first search for health insurance system
started in1962 during the first republic. The federal
government invited Dr. Halevi through the International
Labour Organization (ILO) to look into starting an health
insurance system in Lagos.
Dr. Halevi supported the system but the Nigerian Medical
Association opposed it. The civil war years, caused the
matter to be shelved but was resuscitated by the National
Council on Health in the early 80s, two decades after.
 The Minister of Health, Admiral Patrick Koshoni, on the
advice of the National Council of Health commissioned a
study led by Professor Diejomaoh of the Nigerian Institute
for social and economic research (1984).
 
NHIS CONTD.
 
This was later followed in 1965 by a feasibility study chaired
by Mr. Yinka Lijadu of the National Insurance Corporation of
Nigeria which found the scheme feasible, workable and
desirable in Nigeria.
Finally, in 1988, Professor Olikoye Ransome Kuti,
commissioned the National Committee on Establishment of
the NHIS, chaired by Emma-Eronini and recommended the
capitation model, which is easy to run and almost tailor made
for our health system and traditions.
 The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and
International Labour Organization (ILO) consultants along with
others conducted their own studies in Nigeria to provide
costing, draft legislation and implementation guidelines for
establishing the scheme in 1992.
 
NHIS CONTD.
 
Then the federal executive council, which had
given its approval in 1989, directed federal
ministry of health in 1993 to start the scheme,
which was launched in 1997, and finally
signed to law in May 10, 1999 by the then
Head of State General Abdulsalam Abubakar
 
NHIS: The Nigerian Concept
 
It is a social health security arrangement to provide
financial security to the citizens against unforeseen ill
health. A scheme established by law number 35 of 1999 to
improve health care delivery by providing a sustainable
alternative source of funding health care services.
The scheme works on the principle that higher income
earners will subsidize those with lower income; and those
with lower health needs will subsidize those with higher
needs. Resources are pooled among a large population so
that sufficient fund will be made available to take care of
individuals needing health care at any one time.
It will be a solution to the problem of inappropriate use of
the levels of health care leading to unnecessary costs and
underutilization
 
NHIS: The Nigerian Concept CONTD.
 
It guarantees access to health care as of right to
participants.
The establishment of the scheme was informed
by the general poor state of the nation’s health
care services especially in relation to accessibility,
quality of services rendered, utilization and
distribution, the excessive dependence and
pressure on the government provided health
services, and dwindling funding in the face of
rising cost of heath care services
 
Objectives of the scheme
 
The objectives of NHIS include:
1. To ensure that every Nigerian has access to good health care
services.
2. Protecting families from the financial hardship of huge medical
bills.
3. To ensure equitable distribution of health care costs among
different income groups.
4. Limiting the rise in the cost of health care services.
5. To improve and harness private sector participation in the
provision of health care services
.
.
 
Objectives of the scheme CONTD.
 
6. To ensure equitable patronage of all levels of
health care.
7. To maintain high standard of health care
delivery services within the scheme.
8. To ensure availability of funds to the health
sector for improved services.
9. To ensure efficiency in health care services.
10. To ensure adequate distribution of heath
facilities within the federation
 
Health Care Benefits of the Scheme
 
The benefits derived from participating in the scheme are
defined by law, are fairly comprehensive and include the
following:
Defined elements of curative care such as:
Out patient attendance
Maternity care for up to four births for every insured person
Consultation with defined range of specialist
Hospital care in a public or private hospital in a standard ward,
during a stated duration of stay, for physical or mental disorders.
Eye examination and care, excluding tests for and the actual
provision of spectacles
 
Health Care Benefits of the Scheme
CONTD.
 
Defined dental care:
1. Consultant, Oral examination, preventive care and
pain relief
2. Preventive care including immunization, family
planning, antenatal,post-natal care and health
education.
3. Prescribed drugs and diagnostic tests
4. Prostheses and rehabilitation
From the above it is evident that the contribution of a
small affordable amount buys a lot in terms of health
care
 
How the Scheme Works
 
For participation in the scheme, contributors will first
register with an NHIS approved Health maintenance
Organization (HMO) and thereafter register with a
primary health care provider of his choice for an
approved list of providers supplied HMOs.
When a contributor is registered he will be issued an
Identity card (ID) card with a personal identification
number.
In the event of sickness the contributor presents his ID
card to his chosen primary health care provider (PCP)
for treatment.
 
 
How the Scheme Works CONTD.
 
A contributor has a right to change his PCP after a
minimum period of six months if he is not satisfied with his
services.
The HMO will make payment for services rendered to him
to the health care provider.
A contributor may be asked to make a small co-payment
per prescription at the point of service.
A contribution made by the insured person entitles himself
or herself, spouse and four children under the age of 18
years to full health benefits.
 
How the Scheme Works CONTD.
 
However students in school upon to the age
25years qualify as dependants.
 Extra contributions will be required for
additional dependants.
Contribution to be made by formal sector
employees for health benefits under the
scheme will be 15% of wages, the payment of
which will be by both the employee and the
employer.
 
 
How the Scheme Works CONTD.
 
The employee pays 5%, while the employer makes up the remaining
10%. The employee’s part of the contribution is to be deducted from
his pay with the employer adding his own and subsequently
forwarding the total payment to the appropriate quarters
The implementation of the scheme is planned to be in phases to cover
all
Nigerians categorized as follows:
1. Employers in the formal sector (public and private) – their
contribution will be paid by their employers and those in public
sector by the federal state local governments Parastatals and agencies as
appropriate.
     2. Self-employed person (market women, traders, artisans, farmers
and Businessmen etc) – they will be encouraged to pay their contributions
either by themselves or through cooperatives formed by them.
 
How the Scheme Works CONTD.
 
3. Rural dwellers –for this group suitably priced
programmers designed for them will be
implemented in consultation with various
organizations such as the community banks,
cooperatives, local state and federal governments
as well as donor agencies and other NGOs.
4. Vulnerable groups which include the
unemployed, the aged, the disabled, the street
children, the retarded and the retirees – their
 
 
How the Scheme Works CONTD.
 
contribution will be paid on their behalf by the
federal government, state government and
local governments NGOs, local community
and philanthropists.
It is however important to emphasize that
coverage will be phased starting with
employees in the formal sector representing a
definable group.
 
CONCLUSION
 
The National health Insurance Scheme is set to provide
access to quality health care to all Nigerians.
Quality, accessible and sustainable health care that is
adequately funded, will be guaranteeing a healthy
populace, also provide an economically productive
one, the benefits of which will be accruable to the
individual, the organization and to the Government.
The scheme is already being implemented in the
country and started with workers in the public sector
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Health insurance is essential for everyone to manage medical costs. It provides financial security by spreading the expenses across a large group of individuals. Different types of health insurance, such as private and government-funded, offer various coverage options for individuals and organizations. Health insurance helps people budget for healthcare expenses and ensures access to necessary medical care.


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  1. HEALTH INSURANCE

  2. INTRODUCTION Everyone no matter how healthy needs medical care at some point in time. This may be in form of preventive care or treatment for sicknesses and injuries. With medical care comes payment of fees in one form or the other. Affordability of such fees at the point of use may be difficult. Health insurance provides a form of financing which make payment for the fees relatively easier. .

  3. INTRODUCTION CONTD. Health insurance is an institutional and financial that helps households, individuals and organizations to set aside financial resources to meet costs of medical care in the event of illness. The advantage of insurance is that it converts unpredictable future expenses into payments that can be budgeted for in advance. From this you will observe that health insurance scheme option in health care financing significantly differs from user-fees which in some places are described as cash and carry

  4. Definition Of Health Insurance Health insurance is a system in which prospective consumers of care make payment to a third party in the form of an insurance scheme, which in the event of future illness will pay the provider of care for some or all of the expenses incurred. Health insurance is a type of insurance whereby the insurer pays the medical costs of the insured if the insured becomes sick due to covered causes, or due to accidents.

  5. Health Insurance Contd. The insurer may be a private organization or a government agency. Health insurance is an agreement between a person, who is called the policyholder, and an insurance agent. Insurance agents or carriers are organizations that offer financial protection in case of illness or injury and pays for the policyholder s medical treatment.

  6. Health Insurance Contd. The fundamental concept of health insurance is that it balances costs across a large, random sample of individuals. For instance, an insurance company has a pool of 1000 randomly selected subscribers with each paying N1000.00 per month. Fifty of them get really sick that month while the others stay healthy, which means the insurance company, can use the money of the paid by the healthy people to treat the sick persons

  7. Types of Health Insurance 1. Private Health Insurance Private health insurance is a contract between an insurance company and the customer and in the private sector. Private insurance can be for groups like companies, labour unions, professional association or for individuals. Private: This is through employer owned on-sight health facilities or through contract with outside providers, contribution payable is based strictly on the needs of the individual i.e. the higher the health needs of the contribution the higher the payment.

  8. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. 2 . Public Health Insurance The public sector third party may be Parastatals, insurance scheme, government, and social security and sometimes the providers. With the publicly funded health insurance the good and the bad risks all receive coverage without regard to health status, which eliminates the problem of adverse selection and amplifies the problem of moral hazard.

  9. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. 3. Social Insurance Insurance program financed by government through tax revenues that guarantee citizens financial benefits for events which are beyond individual control, such as old age, disability and poor health. Payment is irrespective of the needs and is usually based on employment and income.

  10. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. _ Based on the principle of solidarity _ Contribution based on ability to pay _ Resources are pooled together among a large population _ It enhances security of each individual in the group. Higher income earners will subsidize those with lower income and those with lower health needs will subsidize those with higher health needs

  11. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. 4. Community Sponsored Insurance A community based program which normally operates in the rural areas and mostly localized e.g. health care scheme in Thailand, Tsonga in Kwara State, Nigeria

  12. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. Other types of HIS include 5. Direct Here the Health Insurance Scheme builds or rents its own health care premises exclusively for the use of the insured persons. 6. Indirect Here the scheme makes contracts with selected providers for the provision of defined services at negotiated prices, the authority rather than the insured persons makes the payment.

  13. Types of Health Insurance CONTD. 7 Reimbursement The patient buys his own medical care in the private market and then sends the receipted bills to the insured who reimburses the insured person either for part of the full cost or on the basis of standard payment for a particular service which will normally be well below the prices actually paid

  14. Problems Of Health Insurance This include: Increasing cost of health care Some private insurance companies charge people at different rates based on their own personal health Some medical problems may not be covered by the scheme Health care recipient is not involved in negotiating the cost of care. Some health care providers have popular and unpopular ways of controlling these costs. Some providers may have different rates for the same procedure for those insured and those not insured

  15. Problems Of Health Insurance CONTD. Problems With Private Health Insurance There two main problems and these are adverse selection and moral hazard. Adverse selection - Describes the tendency for only those who will benefit from insurance to buy it or participate in it. Adverse selection can leave an insurance company with primarily sick subscribers and will have the problem of balancing out the cost of medical expenses with a large number of healthy subscribers. This is because unhealthy people are more likely to purchase health insurance because they anticipate heavy medical bills whereas those who consider themselves to be healthy may decide that medical insurance is an unnecessary expense

  16. Problems Of Health Insurance CONTD. If they see a doctor once in a year and it costs N500.00, that much better than making monthly insurance of N600.00. Moral hazard Describes the state of mind and change in behaviour that results from the knowledge the health insurance will take care of medical bills and people therefore overuse medical care since they do not incur out- of pocket expenses. Where health insurance is in practice, people who do not have insurance cover or are under- insured may wait for too long out of fear of high medical bills until the illness become life threatening.

  17. Conclusion Health insurance is an option of health financing that is used in most developed countries and increasing number of developing countries are also practising health insurance scheme. It converts unpredictable future expenses into payments that can be budgeted for in advance. There are various types of health insurance scheme. The scheme now appear to be a sustainable way of financing health care and reduces the problem of cash and carry health financing and this to a large extent reduces the emergency financial burden when household need to utilize health care.

  18. NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE SCHEME (NHIS) The history of health insurance scheme in Nigeria is over 3 decades but not until 1997 that the scheme was officially launched. The implementation of the scheme in Nigeria is planned to be in phases commencing with pubic civil servants. Private sector involvement is incorporated into the scheme with the use of Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) to collect contributions from participants and also pay providers of services.

  19. NHIS CONTD. Historical Perspective In Nigeria the first search for health insurance system started in1962 during the first republic. The federal government invited Dr. Halevi through the International Labour Organization (ILO) to look into starting an health insurance system in Lagos. Dr. Halevi supported the system but the Nigerian Medical Association opposed it. The civil war years, caused the matter to be shelved but was resuscitated by the National Council on Health in the early 80s, two decades after. The Minister of Health, Admiral Patrick Koshoni, on the advice of the National Council of Health commissioned a study led by Professor Diejomaoh of the Nigerian Institute for social and economic research (1984).

  20. NHIS CONTD. This was later followed in 1965 by a feasibility study chaired by Mr. Yinka Lijadu of the National Insurance Corporation of Nigeria which found the scheme feasible, workable and desirable in Nigeria. Finally, in 1988, Professor Olikoye Ransome Kuti, commissioned the National Committee on Establishment of the NHIS, chaired by Emma-Eronini and recommended the capitation model, which is easy to run and almost tailor made for our health system and traditions. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and International Labour Organization (ILO) consultants along with others conducted their own studies in Nigeria to provide costing, draft legislation and implementation guidelines for establishing the scheme in 1992.

  21. NHIS CONTD. Then the federal executive council, which had given its approval in 1989, directed federal ministry of health in 1993 to start the scheme, which was launched in 1997, and finally signed to law in May 10, 1999 by the then Head of State General Abdulsalam Abubakar

  22. NHIS: The Nigerian Concept It is a social health security arrangement to provide financial security to the citizens against unforeseen ill health. A scheme established by law number 35 of 1999 to improve health care delivery by providing a sustainable alternative source of funding health care services. The scheme works on the principle that higher income earners will subsidize those with lower income; and those with lower health needs will subsidize those with higher needs. Resources are pooled among a large population so that sufficient fund will be made available to take care of individuals needing health care at any one time. It will be a solution to the problem of inappropriate use of the levels of health care leading to unnecessary costs and underutilization

  23. NHIS: The Nigerian Concept CONTD. It guarantees access to health care as of right to participants. The establishment of the scheme was informed by the general poor state of the nation s health care services especially in relation to accessibility, quality of services rendered, utilization and distribution, the excessive dependence and pressure on the government provided health services, and dwindling funding in the face of rising cost of heath care services

  24. Objectives of the scheme 1. To ensure that every Nigerian has access to good health care services. 2. Protecting families from the financial hardship of huge medical bills. 3. To ensure equitable distribution of health care costs among different income groups. 4. Limiting the rise in the cost of health care services. 5. To improve and harness private sector participation in the provision of health care services. . The objectives of NHIS include:

  25. Objectives of the scheme CONTD. 6. To ensure equitable patronage of all levels of health care. 7. To maintain high standard of health care delivery services within the scheme. 8. To ensure availability of funds to the health sector for improved services. 9. To ensure efficiency in health care services. 10. To ensure adequate distribution of heath facilities within the federation

  26. Health Care Benefits of the Scheme The benefits derived from participating in the scheme are defined by law, are fairly comprehensive and include the following: Defined elements of curative care such as: Out patient attendance Maternity care for up to four births for every insured person Consultation with defined range of specialist Hospital care in a public or private hospital in a standard ward, during a stated duration of stay, for physical or mental disorders. Eye examination and care, excluding tests for and the actual provision of spectacles

  27. Health Care Benefits of the Scheme CONTD. Defined dental care: 1. Consultant, Oral examination, preventive care and pain relief 2. Preventive care including immunization, family planning, antenatal,post-natal care and health education. 3. Prescribed drugs and diagnostic tests 4. Prostheses and rehabilitation From the above it is evident that the contribution of a small affordable amount buys a lot in terms of health care

  28. How the Scheme Works For participation in the scheme, contributors will first register with an NHIS approved Health maintenance Organization (HMO) and thereafter register with a primary health care provider of his choice for an approved list of providers supplied HMOs. When a contributor is registered he will be issued an Identity card (ID) card with a personal identification number. In the event of sickness the contributor presents his ID card to his chosen primary health care provider (PCP) for treatment.

  29. How the Scheme Works CONTD. A contributor has a right to change his PCP after a minimum period of six months if he is not satisfied with his services. The HMO will make payment for services rendered to him to the health care provider. A contributor may be asked to make a small co-payment per prescription at the point of service. A contribution made by the insured person entitles himself or herself, spouse and four children under the age of 18 years to full health benefits.

  30. How the Scheme Works CONTD. However students in school upon to the age 25years qualify as dependants. Extra contributions will be required for additional dependants. Contribution to be made by formal sector employees for health benefits under the scheme will be 15% of wages, the payment of which will be by both the employee and the employer.

  31. How the Scheme Works CONTD. The employee pays 5%, while the employer makes up the remaining 10%. The employee s part of the contribution is to be deducted from his pay with the employer adding his own and subsequently forwarding the total payment to the appropriate quarters The implementation of the scheme is planned to be in phases to cover all Nigerians categorized as follows: 1. Employers in the formal sector (public and private) their contribution will be paid by their employers and those in public sector by the federal state local governments Parastatals and agencies as appropriate. 2. Self-employed person (market women, traders, artisans, farmers and Businessmen etc) they will be encouraged to pay their contributions either by themselves or through cooperatives formed by them.

  32. How the Scheme Works CONTD. 3. Rural dwellers for this group suitably priced programmers designed for them will be implemented in consultation with various organizations such as the community banks, cooperatives, local state and federal governments as well as donor agencies and other NGOs. 4. Vulnerable groups which include the unemployed, the aged, the disabled, the street children, the retarded and the retirees their

  33. How the Scheme Works CONTD. contribution will be paid on their behalf by the federal government, state government and local governments NGOs, local community and philanthropists. It is however important to emphasize that coverage will be phased starting with employees in the formal sector representing a definable group.

  34. CONCLUSION The National health Insurance Scheme is set to provide access to quality health care to all Nigerians. Quality, accessible and sustainable health care that is adequately funded, will be guaranteeing a healthy populace, also provide an economically productive one, the benefits of which will be accruable to the individual, the organization and to the Government. The scheme is already being implemented in the country and started with workers in the public sector

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